The Dogs of War

In recognition of Veterans Day in the United States, we repost this article from May 2008 on the special bonds formed between U.S. soldiers and dogs in Iraq and Afghanistan and the efforts of charitable groups to keep them together once the soldiers’ tour of duty is done.

Brian Dennis, a Marine fighter pilot stationed in Anbar province in Iraq, took immediately to the 60-pound German shepherd-border collie mix he found one day while on patrol. The dog had been stabbed with a screwdriver or an awl and had had his ears cut off, the latter apparently in the belief that doing so would make Nubs, as Dennis dubbed him, more alert. Dennis had Nubs treated for his injuries and then had to leave him behind when he was reassigned to a base 70 miles away. Nubs set off after Dennis and somehow found him. His tour of duty in Iraq over, Dennis spent $3,500 to send Nubs to Miramar Marine Corps Air Station in California, where the two are now living.

Special Forces Sgt. Maj. William Gillette happened upon three men beating a German shepherd at a checkpoint on the border of Iraq and Jordan. Brandishing his rifle, he rescued the dog, whom he named Yo-ge. At a cost of thousands of dollars, he took Yo-ge home with him to Clarksville, Tenn.

Staff Sgt. Jason Cowart found an emaciated puppy under a garbage container at his command post and nursed the dog, whom he called Ratchet, back to health. Ratchet sat beside him as he patrolled the streets in a Humvee. When it came time for Cowart to return to Fort Hood, Texas, he wrote to the World Society for the Protection of Animals to ask for help. The Massachusetts-based organization connected him with a Samaritan who paid the costs of shipping Ratchet halfway across the world.

Dogs and soldiers have always forged strong bonds, and the war in Iraq has afforded many opportunities for them to do so. The present conflict, though, has seen unusual efforts on the part of soldiers and civilians to take those dogs back to the States—efforts that sometimes come up against military regulations. One is the standard rule that military equipment, Ratchet’s ride notwithstanding, may not be used to transport nonmilitary animals. Pets are eligible for transportation, but only when a soldier is being permanently assigned to a new post; posts in Iraq and Afghanistan are considered temporary tours of duty, so pets acquired there are ineligible.

Furthermore, it is against regulations for individual soldiers to keep “mascots,” as they are called. Many commanders overlook that point, reasoning that the boost in morale is reason enough to do so. Others do not, though, and put official obstacles in the way of soldiers determined to take their friends home despite the red tape and high costs. To get around the injunction against mascots, Sgt. Peter Neesley built a doghouse just outside his base in Baghdad to house a stray Labrador mix and her pup, whom he named Mama and Boris. Neesley died, and his family worked with a Utah-based animal rescue group to transport the dogs to their home in Michigan. An executive at a private airline volunteered to ship them home, and local government officials helped maneuver Mama and Boris through the military and civilian bureaucracies.

Bonds form officially too. The U.S. Army, for instance, had 578 dog teams in the field in July 2007 when 20-year-old Corp. Kory D. Wiens was killed by an explosive device along with his dog, Cooper, who had been trained to sniff out weapons caches. The two were buried together in Wiens’s Oregon hometown. The military also maintains “official” dogs whose task it is to simply keep soldiers company as a means of reducing combat-related stress. Said one soldier, Sgt. Brenda Rich, of a dog assigned to her unit, “I felt more relaxed after being able spend some time with her. For a few minutes it was just me and the dog, and nothing in this environment seemed to matter.”

In previous wars, military dogs were usually killed at the end of their working lives. Today, however, many of them return home and are adopted by former handlers, police departments, and, as in a few well-publicized cases, the families of handlers killed in action. Such was the case with Lex, a German shepherd whose trainer, 20-year-old Marine Corp. Dustin Lee, died in a mortar attack in Falluja in 2007. Lex, who had played with and slept alongside Corp. Lee throughout their service, was also injured in the attack; the dog at first refused to leave his side and had to be pulled away. Lee’s family lobbied extensively for the Marines to retire Lex before the customary age of 10, and Lex is now living with the Lees at their home in rural Mississippi.

An Iraq-based blogger working in the reconstruction program observes that it often seems that dogs adopt soldiers, not the other way around. “Maybe the dogs just like to be around people. Maybe it is a mutual protection racket. … We are conditioned to support and reward the dogs, just as the dogs are conditioned to guard us. It is primeval. Something in our Pleistocene genes compels the partnership.”

And so it is that the bonds of friendship in war extend across species lines. Yet, even after having successfully skirted the regulations that forbid that friendship, many soldiers simply cannot afford the cost—typically $3,000 to $3,500 per dog—of bringing their partners home. The Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals International reports that at any given time there are a dozen or so dogs awaiting rescue from Iraq and Afghanistan, their passage hindered only by lack of funds. Another organization, Vet Dogs, an offshoot of the Guide Dog Foundation for the Blind, Inc., is active in training service dogs to work with injured veterans; it too is in constant need of funds to support its efforts.

Since it seems that the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan will go on and on, those bonds will continue. And so too will the need for public support for the dogs and soldiers caught up in it.

How Can I Help?

From Baghdad, with Love: A Marine, the War, and a Dog Named Lava
Jay Kopelman and Melinda Roth (2006)

Marine Lieut. Col. Jay Kopelman (now retired from the service), a Pennsylvania native, was serving in Fallujah in November 2004 when, among the ruins of the city, he found a terrified, abandoned puppy hiding in a drainpipe. Kopelman and his fellow soldiers, who had named their group “the Lava Dogs,” called the puppy Lava and adopted him, against military orders. They fed him and cared for him, but they worried when he became too big to be hidden from the authorities. Kopelman, whose tour of duty was soon to end, promised his comrades that, once Stateside, he would find a way to adopt the stray and bring him home to live with him.

From Baghdad with Love is Kopelman’s first-person story of his time in Iraq with Lava and with his struggle to work with and around regulations in order to get Lava home to safety. He was able to do so with the help of military officials and civilians, including that of a journalist who publicized the heartwarming story.

Jay Kopelman has a new book coming out this July called “From Baghdad to America: Life Lessons From a Dog Named Lava” — it’s a sequel to his bestseller “From Baghdad, with Love” (Skyhorse Publishing, Inc.)

these are some of the strongest heroes I could think of to risk themselves for a dog. the bond we share with our pets can grow so strong and these pets that watch over their companions are some of the strongest I know.

I feel sssssssooooooooooooo sorry for dogs that get hurt to save us or other people. I wish some one would put a stop to this. It is so sad i am seriously crying. I wish i could help all the dogs in the world but i am only 11.

I`m an animal person and this is a very touching story, there is no better companion than a dog, he would die protecting you and will give you love even in the hell of war.
These dogs will give comfort when thing are seem hopeless and that comfort can not be replaced.
The government should do and fund these projects to bring these animals home even if this soldier died at least the family have something of him to remember.
God bless all you active and past service persons

Please note that not all military troops are called soldiers. Nubs current owner is a marine, a soldier is a member of the Army. There are airmen and sailors as well. Calling anyone in the military a soldier is incorrect.

Thank you for the correction. The error is made so frequently throughout the article that it seems to me (the editor) that it might be dishonest to go back and correct them all at this point, since I can’t indicate the edits individually where they would occur. So I hope that your note and mine will stand as an acknowledgement of the incorrect terminology. Since posting the article I have been aware that “soldier” is always incorrect when referring to a Marine, but I wasn’t aware that “airman” and “sailor” are also preferred to what I thought was a more generic term, “soldier.” I will keep that in mind in our future writing. Thanks again.

Sending dogs to war is like sending children to war. Dogs and children cannot be heroes because they do not understand the danger or the politics of war. Sending animals and children to wars must stop. It is immoral and barbaric.

The Afghanistan dogs are bred to be fighting dogs and are considered aggressive. Pit Bulls are banned by many countries; how can the Afghanistan dogs be allowed while Pit Bulls are banned?
Just as Pit bulls have a bad rap so does the Kuchi, CAOs and Kangal. Blame the owners not the breed. Stop Breedism. Let’s stop the banning of the Pit Bulls

sorry didn’t see your response, but what I’m trying to say is; Sand cats or being hunted as a sport in many places without restricting laws. I have contacted other resources asking for help, but if there is anything you could do, please let me know!;)